1 / 24

IDENTIFIERS & THE DATA CITATION INDEX

IDENTIFIERS & THE DATA CITATION INDEX. DISCOVERY, ACCESS, AND CITATION OF PUBLISHED RESEARCH DATA NIGEL ROBINSON 17 OCTOBER 2013. OVERVIEW. What is the Data Citation Index? Building the Data Citation Index Integration of identifiers. DEPOSITION OF DATA BY RESEARCHERS. 3.

dragon
Download Presentation

IDENTIFIERS & THE DATA CITATION INDEX

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. IDENTIFIERS & THE DATA CITATION INDEX DISCOVERY, ACCESS, AND CITATION OF PUBLISHED RESEARCH DATA NIGEL ROBINSON 17 OCTOBER 2013

  2. OVERVIEW What is the Data Citation Index? Building the Data Citation Index Integration of identifiers

  3. DEPOSITION OF DATA BY RESEARCHERS 3

  4. RESEARCHERS NOT RECEIVING CREDIT • Barriers to creating and sharing data: • Researchers are hesitant to spend time and effort to create and share data because they don’t feel the work is adequately exposed or accredited • Researchers find are finding it difficult to expose data they have produced because datarepositories do not have clear standards or mechanisms in place for doing so 4

  5. RESEARCHER PROBLEMS Access & discovery Citation standards Lack of willingness to deposit and cite Lack of recognition / credit

  6. IMPACT ON RESEARCH LIBRARIES 6

  7. DATA CITATION INDEX AIMS • Launched October 2012 3.5M data records Enable the discovery of data repositories, data studies and data sets in the context of traditional literature Link data to research publications Help researchers find data sets and studies and track the full impact of their research output Provide expanded measurement of researcher and institutional research output and assessment Facilitate more accurate and comprehensive bibliometric analyses

  8. REPOSITORY SELECTION & EVALUATION • As we evaluate repositories for inclusion, some of the things we consider are: • Editorial Content - ensuring that material is desirable to the research community. • Persistence and stability of the repository, with a steady flow of new information. • Thoroughness and detail of descriptive information. • Links from data to research literature.

  9. REPOSITORY EVALUATION

  10. DATA REPOSITORIES Over 900 repositories identified

  11. TYPES OF DATA BY DISCIPLINE

  12. INDEXING A DATA REPOSITORY ON WEB OF KNOWLEDGE Record Types • Repository/Source: Comprises data studies, data sets and/or microcitations. Stores and provides access to the raw data. • DataStudy: Descriptions of studies or experiments with associated data which have been used in the data study. Includes serial or longitudinal studies over time. • Data Set: A single or coherent set of data or a data file provided by the repository, as part of a collection, data study or experiment. • Microcitation: (nanopublication) An assertion about concepts that have been found to be linked by scientific enquiry, and can be uniquely identified and attributed to its author. Made up of three separate parts: a subject, a predicate and an object.

  13. Search Results within the Data Citation Index present the powerful Web of Knowledge options for exploring a body of information.

  14. Link to all Data Citation Index content associated with this particular Repository.

  15. Link out directly to the original item, in this case a Data Study.

  16. REQUIREMENTS & CHALLENGES • Metadata availability • Lack of repository resources • Lack of repository expertise • Citable data source • Metadata quality • Metadata inconsistencies • Consistent file format • Consistent content • Desirable characteristics • English language for key metadata fields • Metadata curation and quality control • Required metadata fields present for citation • Consistent metadata to allow mapping to DCI fields • Member of extended network • Data dictionary and schema available • Data repositories are not static • How is version control handled? • Partnerships

  17. DATA CITATION BEHAVIOUR Current citation style (in full text of article) Desired/future citation style (as part of cited references) U.S. Dept. of Justice, Bureau of Justice Statistics (1996): MURDER CASES IN 33 LARGE URBAN COUNTIES IN THE UNITED STATES, 1988. Version 1. Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research. http://dx.doi.org/10.3886/ICPSR09907.v1 Lee, Seung-Jae; Lee, He-Jin; Cho, Ji-Hoon; Rho, Sangchul; Hwang, Daehee (2008): GSE11574: The responses of astrocytes stimulated by extracellular a-synuclein. Gene Expression Omnibus. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/geo/query/acc.cgi?acc=GSE11574

  18. INTEGRATION OF IDENTIFIERS

  19. DATA CITATION INDEX RECORD WITH CLAIMED DATA

  20. RESEARCHERID RECORD FOR AUTHOR

  21. DATA CITATION INDEX Discovery of data most important to scholarly research Data linked to published research literature Measures of data citation, use and reuse with attribution assisted by identifiers New metrics for digital scholarship

  22. Thank you Nigel Robinson nigel.robinson@thomsonreuters.com

More Related